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PETA's Giant 'Elephant' Confronts Circusgoers in Richmond

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Protesters Draw Attention to Ringling's Abuse of Animals

 

For Immediate Release:
April 19, 2011

Contact:
David Perle 202-483-7382

 

Richmond, Va. - A giant inflatable "elephant" will lead PETA members in a protest against the arrival of the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus at the Richmond Coliseum on Wednesday. Wearing a headdress that reads, "Ringling Beats Animals," the "elephant" will represent animals who are abused by the circus.

 

Where:           Richmond Coliseum, 601 E. Leigh St. (near the intersection of East Leigh and Seventh streets), Richmond

When:            Wednesday, April 20, 12 noon

 

"Richmond residents wouldn't go within a mile of the big top if they knew that elephants used by Ringling suffer a lifetime of abuse," says PETA campaigns manager Lindsay Rajt. "As infants, elephants are torn away from their mothers and beaten into submission for nothing but a lifetime of cheap tricks."

 

PETA has released dozens of compelling photos taken inside Ringling's Florida training center by a veteran elephant handler. The photos expose how still-nursing baby elephants are forcefully trained after having been captured rodeo-style and dragged away from their mothers. The baby elephants scream and struggle frantically as they are wrestled, stretched out, slammed to the ground, gouged with steel-tipped bullhooks, and shocked with electric prods. These abusive sessions go on for several hours a day for up to a year. Since 1998, at least four babies born at Ringling's breeding center have died and countless others have suffered serious injuries during training or performances.

 

For more information, please visit RinglingBeatsAnimals.com.


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